Rescuing Jesus by Deborah Jian Lee

Rescuing Jesus:How People of Color, Women, and Queer Christians are Reclaiming Evangelicalism is an inside look at the young, diverse, progressive Christians who are transforming the evangelical movement

Rescuing Jesus: How People of Color, Women, and Queer Christians are Reclaiming Evangelicalism

An inside look at the young, diverse, progressive Christians who are transforming the evangelical movement

Deborah Jian Lee left the evangelical world because she was frustrated by its conservative politics. But over the years she stayed close to those in the movement, and she has come to realize that evangelical culture and politics is changing, and changing fast. Friends had stopped voting based on wedge issues. Believers of color were changing church demographics and political interests. Women were rising in the ranks despite familiar sermons about female submission. LGBTQ Christians were coming out, staying in the church, and leading ministries.

What Lee came to find is that most of what we think we know about evangelicals is wrong, or is well on its way to becoming dated. In Rescuing Jesus, she ventures into the world of progressive evangelicalism and tells the stories of the young women and men at the forefront of a movement that could change both the face and the substance of religion in the US.

Generational changes and the shifting racial make-up of evangelicals are transforming the movement and pushing it in a more progressive direction. A young and diverse array of people on this leading edge of progressive evangelicalism—LGBTQ and straight, white, black, Asian, Hispanic and indigenous—are working to wrest political power away from conservatives. Today’s young evangelicals are more likely than their elders to accept same-sex marriage, more inclined to think of “pro-life” issues as being about supporting society’s disenfranchised, and more accepting of equality between men and women.

With empathy, journalistic rigor, and powerful storytelling, Lee unpacks the diverse and complex strands of this movement—and what it means for the rest of us. Given the clout that evangelicals still hold in national politics, Lee argues, this movement is important not only for the future of evangelicalism but also for the future of our country.

Critical Praise

“One of the most important books I’ve read in years, Rescuing Jesus is a thoughtful, well-researched, and compelling page-turner that gives me hope for the future of Christianity. Lee’s reporting skills really shine as she features the stories of women, people of color, and queer Christians stepping out of the margins to lead the Church in new and exciting directions. I’ll be recommending this book to anyone who asks me about the future of Christianity in America and I’ll be returning to it often myself for research, encouragement, and inspiration.”

- Rachel Held Evans, author of Searching for Sunday: Loving, Leaving, and Finding the Church

“In Rescuing Jesus, Deborah Jian Lee smashes the stereotype that ‘evangelical’ automatically means ‘socially conservative.’ With passionate reporting and skillful storytelling, Lee takes us into the world of Christians who share the same values of tolerance and social justice as secular progressives. Lee puts a human face on the large number of evangelicals invisible in a media culture that focuses on the most extreme right-wing adherents. Every liberal should read this book.”

- Dale Maharidge, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of And Their Children After Them

“Deborah Jian Lee’s Rescuing Jesus offers a substantial, well-written, and compelling investigative report on the stresses and strains of U.S. evangelicalism on issues of race, gender, and sexuality. The author, herself a young refugee from evangelicalism, tells a bracing story that mixes bloodcurdling accounts of (oblivious white patriarchal straight male) evangelicalism with stories of the emerging young leaders who are challenging it. This is an important contribution, carefully reported, thoughtful in its analysis, and highly recommended.”

- David Gushee, Distinguished University Professor of Christian Ethics and Director of the Center for Theology and Public Life, Mercer University, and author of Changing Our Mind

“Lee’s reporting indicts modern American evangelicalism’s failure to be good news for those who aren’t conservative, straight, white men. Weaving in her own story, she movingly chronicles her subjects’ search for a spiritual home, and what emerges is a profoundly hopeful, deeply Christian narrative about redemption and resurrection.”

- Jeff Chu, author of Does Jesus Really Love Me?

"The evangelical church in America is changing from within and Deborah Jian Lee enthusiastically charts its new and unexpected course. Lee shows how conservatives took charge of the church in the late twentieth century and how, in the early twenty-first century, women, minorities, and gays are taking it back and reshaping what it means to be an evangelical in America. Rescuing Jesus is an important and refreshing look at religion in America from a smart and passionate observer."